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fortably between decks, and fastened down looseluggage. A baby girl born three days after departure waschristened Amazon Seaborn Harris.The voyage had its share of challenges anddifficulties, which gave the emigrants opportunity to usetheir religious teachings and their ward organizations. At5:30 each morning the Saints were to ''rise, receivewater, clean out berths, scrape the decks and prepare forprayers in the various Wards at 7 o'clock. " 8 However,because many became seasick right away, caring for andadministering to the sick caused a relaxation of thatrigorous schedule. At times the ship was becalmed; attimes the crew fought headwinds. One Sunday the shipwas hit by a violent squall while ward meetings werebeing conducted on the lower deck. One sail was "tominto ribbons like paper, '' and water poured down thehatches before they could be closed. But the singing ofthe hymns continued. The second mate was heard toexclaim how astonished he was at ''the nonchalancedisplayed by the sisters in such a season of apparentperil. " 9English Saints aboard the ship outnumbered theWelsh five to one, but tha! did not deter some membersof each group from squabbling over the relative merits nftheir homelands. The ship's presidency tried to calm therivalry by preaching against nationalism. A littleirritation which developed over family cookingarrangements also had to be smoothed over. And apparentlya few were guilty of ''finding'' articles that hadnot been lost. Still, on the whole, the voyage appears tohave been a positive and memorable experience.THE OVERLAND JOURNEYAfter their arrival in New York on July 18, theAmazon Saints were taken by rail and river steamer toFlorence, Nebraska, Though the Civil War was raging atthe time, they were largely unaffected by it. AtFlorence, teams and wagons provided by the Church metthose who could not afford to provide their own transportation.They then divided into several companies forthe final leg of their journey.From Salt Lake City, Elder George A. Smith of theCouncil of the Twelve sent Charles Dickens a finalreport on the progress of the Amazon's emigrants:"The whole company arrived in this city, andencamped on the Union square on Saturday & SundayOct. 3rd & 4th, in good health and fine spirits. Afterattending the General Conference, they distributedthemselves among the people of the Territory, like thewater of a river as it empties .into the sea, and could nowonly be found by searching 25,000 square miles of country,and by their industrious habits, they are placedwhere they will soon put themselves in possession of thenecessary comforts of life. " 10SETTLING IN THE WESTThe temporary " family" which had worked so closelytogether aboard the Amazon now dispersed. Mostbecame part of another kind of family, the ward organizationsof the various Latter-day Saint settlements. Ahigh proportion settled first in Utah. Of the Amazonpassengers for whom information has been located, ninety-eightpercent lived in Utah during 1863-65. By 1891-1900, eighty-four percent still lived in Utah, whilethirteen percent were in Idaho and three percent wereelsewhere.Success and tragedy alike met the immigrants in thewestern United States . One was struck and killed by arailroad train, leaving a large family. Another committedsuicide, apparently in despair over the recent death of hiswife. William Fowler became a school teacher in Manti,Utah , but died only two years after he immigrated. Somehad marital difficulties. A few became disillusioned withtheir religion and left it entirely or abandoned churchinvolvement. From all indications, however, the vastmajority remained faithful to the Church, and most receivedthe sacred ordinances of the Endowment House,which was used before temples were completed in Utah.The Amazon immigrants' achievements as individualswere notable. Lavinia Triplett became Utah's leadingfemale vocalist in her day. Edward L. Sloan was anoutstanding writer and newspaper editor. The Castletonfamily became prominent merchants, the Larkins respectedmorticians. William McLachlan became the firstpresident of the Pioneer Stake in Salt Lake City. AndGeorge Sutherland, an infant when the Amazon sailed,became a U.S. Senator and a justice of the United StatesSupreme Court. Others were bishops, patriarchs, statelegislators, and fine parents- people who contributed inmany ways to the building of their communities. To useCharles Dicken's phrase, they became the "pick andflower" of western America. 0Richard L. Jensen. a high councilor in the Salt Lake Hunter WestStake, and Gordon Irving, assistant stake clerk in the Bountiful UtahSouth Stake. are both research historians in the Church HistoricalDepartment.Notesl. Charles Dickens, " The Uncommercial Traveller," All the YearRound, 4 July 1863 , pp. 444, 446.2. Statistical information in this article is based on a computerassistedstudy of data compiled from the passenger list of the Amazonin the British Mission's Emigration Records on file in the Church Hi st.Dept. Archives, family group sheets in the Church Genealogical Dept.Archives, and other basic sources of biographical and genealogicalinformation.3. Andrew Jenson , Latter-day Saint Biographical Encyclopedia, 4vols . (1901 ; reprinted. , Salt Lake City: Western Epics, 1971), 2:692.4. J. Spencer Cornwall, Stories of Our Mormon Hymns, 2nd ed. ,(Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 1963), pp . 207-211 .5. Charles Henry John West Journal, 1833-1906, photocopy of typescriptin the possession of the authors , p. 4.6. Elijah Larkin Diary, 2 Apr. 1863, photocopy of typescript, Hi st.Dept. Archives, p. 431 ."7. Ibid. , 3 June 1863 , p. 454.8. William Bramall, E. L. Sloan, and Richard Palmer letter toGeorge Q. Cannon, 19 July 1863, Millennia/ Star, 25:542.9. Edward L. Sloan Diary, 28 June 1863, holograph, Hist. Dept.Archives.10. George A. Smith letter to " Mr. Uncommercial," 14 Oct., copy inHistorian 's Office Letterpress Copybook, 1859-69, Hist. Dept.Archives.THE <strong>ENSIGN</strong>/MARCH 1980 19

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